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Genix Technology

Product Defect Lawyers in Albuquerque NM - 0 views

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    If you've been hurt by a poorly designed or manufactured product, sue the company through our Product Defect Lawyers in Albuquerque NM. Any damages caused by a product you used, you may have a defective product liability claim.
Genix Technology

Product Defect Lawyers in Austin TX - 0 views

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    If you've been hurt by a poorly designed or manufactured product, sue the company through our Austin defective product lawyers. Any damages caused by a product you used, you may have a defective product liability claim.
Genix Technology

Product Defect Lawyers in Baltimore MD - 0 views

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    If you've been hurt by a poorly designed or manufactured product, sue the company through our Baltimore defective product lawyers. Any damages caused by a product you used, you may have a defective product liability claim.
Genix Technology

Product Defect Lawyers in Baton Rouge LA - 0 views

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    If you've been hurt by a poorly designed or manufactured product, sue the company through our Baton Rouge defective product lawyers. Any damages caused by a product you used, you may have a defective product liability claim.
John Pearce

Clive Thompson on 3-D Printing's Legal Morass | Wired Design | Wired.com - 2 views

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    "Last winter, Thomas Valenty bought a MakerBot - an inexpensive 3-D printer that lets you quickly create plastic objects. His brother had some Imperial Guards from the tabletop game Warhammer, so Valenty decided to design a couple of his own Warhammer-style figurines: a two-legged war mecha and a tank. He tweaked the designs for a week until he was happy. "I put a lot of work into them," he says. Then he posted the files for free downloading on Thingiverse, a site that lets you share instructions for printing 3-D objects. Soon other fans were outputting their own copies. Until the lawyers showed up."
Rhondda Powling

Larrikin Post | Who Owns Your Social Media Posts? - 1 views

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    Who owns your social media posts? Former Australian Copyright Council employee, lawyer Ian McDonald considers the copyright issues
John Pearce

Bloggers Beware: You CAN Get Sued For Using Pics on Your Blog - My Story - Bl... - 8 views

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    Well on one random post, I grabbed one random picture off of google and then a few weeks later I got contacted by the photographer who owned that photo. He sent me a takedown notice, which I responded to immediately because I felt awful that I had unknowingly used a copyrighted pic. The pic was down within minutes. But that wasn't going to cut it. He wanted compensation for the pic. A significant chunk of money that I couldn't afford. I'm not going to go into the details but know that it was a lot of stress, lawyers had to get involved, and I had to pay money that I didn't have for a use of a photo I didn't need.
John Pearce

Rob Reid: The $8 billion iPod - YouTube - 3 views

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    Comic author Rob Reid unveils Copyright Math (TM), a remarkable new field of study based on actual numbers from entertainment industry lawyers and lobbyists.
Tony Richards

Welcome to Life: the singularity, ruined by lawyers - YouTube - 4 views

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    The future after physical existence ends. Great video  for challenging student thinking about the future.
John Pearce

Edudemic » The Ultimate Guide To Online Privacy - 3 views

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    "If you've ever visited a website that handles even the smallest bit of your personal information, there's a good chance (hopefully) that it's asked you to read through a privacy policy or two. Rather than pour over the details, many of us simply click on 'I AGREE!' and proceed with using the application. Even the companies and websites involved understand this and make it as easy as possible to satisfy lawyers as well as users. What's the harm in essentially ignoring that privacy policy? While the majority of the time it's harmless, there are some ne'er-do-wells that may gather your personal information and sell it to marketers, advertisers, or spammers. While terrible, it's not unheard of."
Shelly Terrell

Teachers speak out - the full results of the Guardian Teacher Network survey | Teacher ... - 3 views

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    he job of teaching * Join in the discussion reddit this Comments (1) Wendy Berliner Guardian Professional, Monday 3 October 2011 18.30 BST Article history Teacher Daniel Hartley from Chulmleigh Community College, Devon. Photograph: Apex Back in the summer we decided here at GTN HQ that, with our membership rocketing, it was the right time to mark our first six months in operation with a survey to find out what members thought about teaching today. There were questions across a wide spectrum of topics and, at the end, we left a free text box for teachers to add any comments they wanted to share. It was the dying days of the summer holiday - August 25 - when it went out just after lunch. We knew the survey would take ten or 15 minutes to complete so we weren't quite expecting what happened next, but within those first few hours after its release, we realised you had started something big. By 10.30pm that night we'd had several hundred questionnaires back, which in itself was impressive with many teachers perhaps still away on holiday or back but busy preparing for the new term. The most impressive thing of all was the content of those text boxes. There was just so much of it. Some people wrote several hundred words at a time, speaking clearly from the heart and arguing cogently against the things they felt were going wrong in education. A love of teaching and vocational pleasure felt working with children and young people emerged but it was emerging from a fog caused by far less pleasant aspects of the job - disrespect from society and governments, bullying by senior management, other teachers, parents and students, despair at the parenting skills of some homes and despair with government targets and league tables that were funnelling education into an ever thinner tube feeding stuff that improved Sats and exam results rather than nourishing a lifelong love of learning. One former solicitor questioning the sense of the switch into teaching said: " M
Shane Roberts

Epistemic Games - building the future of education - 6 views

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    "Epistemic games are computer games that can help players learn to think like engineers, urban planners, journalists, lawyers, and other innovative professionals, giving them the tools they need for a changing world."
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